Tim Cavanaugh | March 28, 2006
Talking about immigration reform. Listen here.
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Punish the law-abiding foreigner and reward the criminal?
Welcome to our hypocritical NEW immigration reform. It sounds like
1986 again.
Law-abiding foreigners pay $100 to US Consulates around the world
for the PRIVILEGE of APPLYING for a TOURIST visa, and then are
judged whether or not they can pass a background check, are of fine
upstanding character and are financially qualified to ONLY visit
our mediocre country. Forget a work-visa, you have to wait 10 tens
because an illegal already has their job in the U.S.
On the other hand - completely unidentified illegal aliens, who
have no right to be in the country, simply walk or swim across the
border and get work at the nearest fast-food restaurant, hotel,
construction site or farm of their choosing, so that they can
increase the owner's bottom-line profit by 20%.
If this is "progressive thinking", then I'm going back to the dark
ages....or maybe Singapore, do I need a visa?
Mr. Hackett,
I agree that the way we enforce immigration law in this country
seems absurd.
"...get work at the nearest fast-food restaurant, hotel,
construction site or farm of their choosing, so that they can
increase the owner's bottom-line profit by 20%."
I'm not sure all of that trickles into an employer's bottom-line.
While some of it, surely, goes to employers, some of it gets passed
as savings to customers. ...and the thing about illegal alien
workers is that they tend to spend a large portion of their money
on mere sustenance. A big part of what they earn, that is, gets
cycled back into the economy.
...also, I think "business owner" probably isn't the right word for
many of the people doin' the hiring of illegal labor. ...some of
'em are women who work and need someone to watch the kids.
...people hire illegals to do yard work. Single moms and old people
don't really make a 20% profit when they find someone who'll watch
the kids or mow the lawn for cheap.
It's my understanding that the average income per capita here in
the United States is greater than it is in other developed
countries with more restrictive immigration policies. ...The
unemployment rate, or so I understand, is much lower here in the
United States than it is in other developed countries. ...I would
think, inflation must be lower than it would be with higher priced
low skilled labor.
I guess I just don't see the problem. ...and I live in Los Angeles.
My understanding is that one of the reasons the economy has done so
well here in California over the last five years or so, even when
it was kinda slow elsewhere, has to do with all the
immigration--legal or otherwise. I'm all for making immigration
enforcement sane again, but I sure don't want to kill the goose
that's layin' the golden eggs.
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